I disagree with describing it "narrow". It is parsimonious, but leaves nothing unaccounted for. It's reasonable to methodologically treat abstractions as independent existents, but that utility does not depend on an ontological commitment.Again, your definition of what exists is too narrow. — Wayfarer
I disagree with describing it "narrow". It is parsimonious, but leaves nothing unaccounted for. It's reasonable to methodologically treat abstractions as independent existents, but that utility does not depend on an ontological commitment.
Emphasis on the qualifier "independent", because this parsimonious ontology doesn't deny the existence of triangles and right angles, it just denies that they exist independently of the things that have those properties. The angles between the walls of my bedroom are 90 degrees - and this angle does actually exist, just not independently of the walls. Many other things have this exact same property, and that's why "having a 90 degree angle" is a universal.
My issue is that there's no good reason to assume "90 degree angle" exists independent of the things that have it. Sure, we can think abstractly about this property without considering the things that have it, and that's a product of our powers of abstraction.
I think it's a product of the pedagogy of mathematics, physics, logic and some related fields. We're taught that triangles and laws of physics (expressed as equations) exist. This leads us to speak of them that way, and this leads to treating them as ontic, and not just as a manner of speaking.That’s right. The issue is this should be self-evident and the problem is people just don’t understand the words. — Zelebg
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